Swahili
Albanian
Arabic
Armenian
Azerbaijani
Belarusian
Bengali
Bosnian
Catalan
Czech
Danish
Deutsch
Dutch
English
Estonian
Finnish
Français
Greek
Haitian Creole
Hebrew
Hindi
Hungarian
Icelandic
Indonesian
Irish
Italian
Japanese
Korean
Latvian
Lithuanian
Macedonian
Mongolian
Norwegian
Persian
Polish
Portuguese
Romanian
Russian
Serbian
Slovak
Slovenian
Spanish
Swahili
Swedish
Turkish
Ukrainian
Vietnamese
Български
中文(简体)
中文(繁體)
Clinical Journal of Pain 2012-Oct

Diffuse noxious inhibitory control function in women with provoked vestibulodynia.

Watumiaji waliosajiliwa tu ndio wanaweza kutafsiri nakala
Ingia / Ingia
Kiungo kimehifadhiwa kwenye clipboard
Kate S Sutton
Caroline F Pukall
Susan Chamberlain

Maneno muhimu

Kikemikali

OBJECTIVE

The objective of the study was to assess diffuse noxious inhibitory control (DNIC) function in women with provoked vestibulodynia (PVD) compared with healthy controls through the use of 2 different methodologies. Furthermore, the study aimed to assess whether pain characteristics correlate with DNIC in women with PVD.

METHODS

Twenty-three healthy control women and 23 women diagnosed with PVD by the study gynecologist participated in the study. To assess DNIC, heat pain tolerance, determined through an ascending method of limits and temporal summation of thermal pain were used as test stimuli and a cold water bath was used as the conditioning stimulus. Participants reported on pain characteristics as potential correlates with DNIC function.

RESULTS

No significant group differences were found in the number of DNIC responders per group when using heat pain tolerance or temporal summation procedures to examine DNIC. The magnitude of the DNIC response was examined for the overall groups and for positive DNIC responders only. When all participants were included in the analyses with the heat pain tolerance procedure, women with PVD displayed a higher magnitude of DNIC responding. Correlations between pain variables and DNIC responding and magnitude were nonsignificant.

CONCLUSIONS

Results support previous findings of intact DNIC function in women with PVD, using both an ascending method of limits and a temporal summation paradigm. Pain-related variables were not correlated with DNIC function in women with PVD, perhaps this unexpected finding is due to the possibility that central processes other than DNIC, such as descending facilitation, provoke or maintain this chronic pain condition.

Jiunge na ukurasa
wetu wa facebook

Hifadhidata kamili ya mimea ya dawa inayoungwa mkono na sayansi

  • Inafanya kazi katika lugha 55
  • Uponyaji wa mitishamba unaungwa mkono na sayansi
  • Kutambua mimea kwa picha
  • Ramani ya GPS inayoshirikiana
  • Soma machapisho ya kisayansi yanayohusiana na utafutaji wako
  • Tafuta mimea ya dawa na athari zao
  • Panga maslahi yako na fanya tarehe ya utafiti wa habari, majaribio ya kliniki na ruhusu

Andika dalili au ugonjwa na usome juu ya mimea ambayo inaweza kusaidia, chapa mimea na uone magonjwa na dalili ambazo hutumiwa dhidi yake.
* Habari zote zinategemea utafiti wa kisayansi uliochapishwa

Google Play badgeApp Store badge